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Tri-Caucus Urges Senate and House to Improve Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA)

September 28, 2015

Washington, DC – Today, leaders of the Congressional Tri-Caucus—comprised of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC), the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC)—sent a letter to the Chairs and Ranking Members of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions as well as the House Committee on Education and the Workforce regarding the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA).  The letter shares the Tri-Caucus’ core ESEA principles and calls for the inclusion of these principles as ESEA moves forward in conference. 

The text of the letter is below. The full text of the letter can be found here.

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Dear Chairman Alexander, Ranking Member Murray, Chairman Kline, and Ranking Member Scott:

The Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC), the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC)—also known as the Congressional Tri-Caucus—write to share our core principles as you consider the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA).  These principles are critical to addressing educational inequities within communities of color and historically disadvantaged communities, and we urge you to consider them as you proceed to conference.

The ESEA is a critical civil rights law intended to ensure that all children—regardless of zip code, family wealth, background, English Language Proficiency, or disability—have the unequivocal right to an equitable education. Despite this original intent of the law, the current elementary and secondary education system is flawed.  Many students, particularly those that the ESEA intended to protect, fall through the cracks.  As such, we strongly urge you to consider the following principles in order to improve the legislation and achieve reauthorization of the ESEA that eliminates, not perpetuates, persistent inequities within our nation's public education system.  Specifically, we believe the bill must be strengthened to:

  1. Hold states and school districts accountable for meeting the academic needs of all students.  Subgroup accountability must be strengthened in order to ensure that the academic performance of disadvantaged students is not masked by averages.  States and school districts must be held accountable for the education of every child.  The law must require timely state action to address inequities where they persist with federal resources and support provided to the lowest performing schools, including those schools with low-performing student subgroups.  Accountability for low-performing high schools, frequently referred to as “dropout factories”, must be addressed and strengthened.  The language must be improved to ensure that State-determined annual goals are consistent among all student subgroups; that interventions are required when the same student subgroup misses a state-set goal for two or more consecutive years; and that the use of super subgroups is expressly prohibited for the purposes of reporting and accountability.  Lastly, any state-established threshold for student group size (“n-size”) must be clear, transparent, consistent across subgroups, and uniform across states.
  1. Require school districts to equitably distribute resources and close the comparability loophole.  Reauthorization must address funding inequities in current law.  Resources must be equitably distributed, specifically targeting poorer schools and students that need it the most.   
  1. Strengthen, make transparent, and enforce annual data collection and reporting. Specifically, data collection must be cross-tabulated by gender, and disaggregated by student subgroups, Asian American and Pacific Islander racial subgroups, and English language proficiency levels.  Data must show student performance and must be available and accessible, including expressly requiring that translated resources be provided to families with limited English proficiency. 

The reauthorization of ESEA must further protect children of historically underserved communities—specifically, children of color, children with disabilities, and children in poverty—so that they can break the cycle of poverty and overcome socio-economic barriers for a brighter future.  We remain hopeful that continued bipartisan, bicameral collaboration will ensure the principles of the CAPAC, CBC, and CHC are embodied in any reauthorization of the ESEA.

Sincerely,

Judy Chu, Chair, Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC)

G. K. Butterfield, Chair, Congressional Black Caucus (CBC)

Linda T. Sánchez, Chair, Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC)

Danny K. Davis, Co-Chair, CBC Education and Labor Task Force  

Chaka Fattah, Co-Chair¸ CBC Education and Labor Task Force

Raúl Grijalva, Co-Chair, CHC Education and Labor Task Force

Rubén Hinojosa, Co-Chair, CHC Education and Labor Task Force

Background:  On June 10, 2015, over 80 Members of the Congressional Tri-Caucus sent a letter to the Chairman and Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions calling for stronger subgroup accountability, resource equity, and disaggregated data collection.  A link to the letter can be found here.  In July of 2015, the House passed the Student Success Act and the Senate passed the Every Child Achieves Act to reauthorize the ESEA.